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23 Sentences With "coin a phrase"

How to use coin a phrase in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "coin a phrase" and check conjugation/comparative form for "coin a phrase". Mastering all the usages of "coin a phrase" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I mean, this is very interesting to coin a phrase.
To coin a phrase: The revolution will not be embargoed.
If I may coin a phrase: It's the white resentment, stupid.
That's why its fate is so, to coin a phrase, uncertain.
He is, to coin a phrase, built like a brick shit house.
Not to coin a phrase or anything, but … we'll always have Paris.
I wanted something simple that, er, "just works" (to coin a phrase).
I think what she said about Ivanka Trump was deplorable, to coin a phrase.
KJ: To coin a phrase, that which you wish to tidy, you must first destroy.
" Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the House minority leader, tried to coin a phrase: "Make America sick again?
Right now, to coin a phrase, we, our economy and the people and the workers and entrepreneurs, they're killing it.
As a theatrical movie, it would have been a nonevent; as a Netflix event it is, to coin a phrase, fake news.
The US, to coin a phrase from the Obama administration, will be leading from the rear, coughing up a $3 billion line of credit.
Americans are fed up with feeling that the system is rigged against them — to coin a phrase — and itching for leaders who will unrig it.
A philosophy of diminishment and retrenchment, and the dismantlement of the international administrative state - to coin a phrase from Steve Bannon - is not in our interest.
That, in Trump's mind, is proof positive that all the chatter about him not being able to make good on his campaign promises is, to coin a phrase, fake news.
The debate over how aggressively to limit greenhouse gas emissions is driven, to coin a phrase, by how "abrupt and expensive" it might be if the response comes up short.
In fact, it was The New York Times and other eastern outlets - the phrase "Eastern Establishment" had become perfunctory - that had set their sights (to coin a phrase) on Palin. Why?
However, unlike the exchange's previous warehousing problem of long load-out queues, there is no "bazooka" solution, to coin a phrase used by Charles Li, head of the LME's owner Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing.
Rodwell is believed to have created the term heterosexism in January 1971 when he wrote: > After a few years of this kind of 'liberated' existence such people become > oblivious and completely unseeing of straight and - to coin a phrase - the > 'hetero-sexism' surrounding them virtually 24 hours a day.Rodwell, Craig. ' > 'The Tarnished Golden Rule' ' pg. 5, QQ Magazine, Queen's Quarterly > Publishing, New York.
Unfortunately she is a strong personality and plays it well, otherwise I would of course have had her out of the cast weeks ago."Payn (1982), p. 235 He was still more forthright to his friends Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne: "I have been having a terrible time with After the Ball, mainly on account of Mary Ellis's singing voice which, to coin a phrase, sounds like someone fucking the cat. I know that your sense of the urbane, sophisticated Coward wit will appreciate this simile.
Sallis pronounces the episode to be "Kafka-esque, to coin a phrase", but never does reveal if he actually did go through with the dubbing. Welles began the production in Yugoslavia. To create Josef K.’s workplace, he created a set in an exposition hall just outside Zagreb, where 850 secretaries banged typewriters at 850 office desks. Other sequences were later shot in Dubrovnik, Rome, Milan and Paris. Welles was not able to film The Trial in Kafka’s home city of Prague, as his work was seen as decadent by the communist government in Czechoslovakia.
Other roles followed in the 1950s and 1960s including Orson Welles' 1955 production of Moby Dick—Rehearsed. In his autobiography, Fading into the Limelight, Sallis recounts a later meeting with Welles where he received a mysterious telephone call summoning him to the deserted Gare d'Orsay in Paris where Welles announced he wanted him to dub Hungarian bit- players in his cinema adaptation of Franz Kafka's The Trial (1962). Sallis wrote that "the episode was Kafka-esque, to coin a phrase". Later, he was in the first West End production of Cabaret in 1968 opposite Judi Dench.

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